Abstract

Leg-length discrepancy (LLD) can cause distinct gait and posture disorders that may lead to lifestyle-limiting disability and premature joint degeneration. The purpose of this study was to describe a novel surgical method for acute femoral lengthening in adults with symptomatic structural LLD using step-cut osteotomy, traction table, and proximal femoral locking plate fixation. We retrospectively evaluated three consecutive adult patients that underwent the procedure at our institution between 2011 and 2019, describing the surgical technique and presenting a report of three cases, including complications assessment. The average age was 47years (range 38-58), average BMI was 28.1kg/m2 (range 26.8-29.9), average ASA score was 2 (range 1-3). The mean pre-operative shortening (2 congenital, 1 posttraumatic) was 21mm (range 20-23). The average elongation achieved was 18mm (range 15-20). The average surgery duration was 142min (range 120-165) and the average estimated blood loss was 558mL (range 375-900). Symptoms were relieved after the lengthening in all three cases. We observed no complications after the mean 68months (range 22-125) of follow-up. Successful correction of structural LLD is challenging, depends on patient selection, meticulous planning, surgical technique and experience. Therefore, it should be considered case-by-case. In the hands of an experienced surgeon, our method of acute femoral lengthening seems safe and suitable for carefully selected cases of structural LLD correction, where the final lengthening goal remains within the critical limits of one-stage leg lengthening and principles of traction table use.

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